That's the first line in singer-songwriter Janelle Monae's hit single, "Make Me Feel," which she'll be performing in Cincinnati on July 10 when she brings tour for her third full-length album, "Dirty Computer," to the Taft Theatre.

It's also a line that Cincinnati fans now have on repeat after the tour poster began circulating on social media Monday.

If that's not bad enough, try looking up "Cinncinati,""Cincinati" and "Cincinnatti," the latter of which singer-songwriter The Weeknd used in 2016 when announcing his 2017 "Starboy Legend of The Fall" world tour stop at U.S. Bank Arena.

So, what is so vexing about the spelling of Cincinnati? To take another line from Monae's "Make Me Feel," it can't be explained, but we can try for you:

It all comes down to the 'T's and the 'N's.

"Everything we learn growing up tells us that there should be two 't's in there. Instead, they dropped a 't' and added an 'n' which most people get backwards entirely," according to this list of the 10 most misspelled United States city names.

That appears to be where Janelle Monae's tour manager slipped up. Same with that of The Weeknd.

"I know the Bengals have never won a Super Bowl, I know it's been over a decade since the Reds were good, I know the Bearcat basketball program has fallen off the radar, and I know people are moving out of the city like it's ground zero for swine flu, but let's please make sure that we're spelling CINCINNATI correctly," he wrote.

He's not the only one who has gotten fed up with the erroneous misspelling. Twitter user @ItsCincinnati has gently taken 1,000-plus users — including a well-known local establishment — to task for their errors in tweets and geolocations since 2013.